Plus I can think of an even better wrist exercise that involves rubbing with a better payoff!erttheking said:What's fun about rubbing someone's face until the plot can progress? It's basically just wrist exercise.
But I would have liked that stupid minigame.erttheking said:How much they're removing? They removed one stupid mini-game and one scene. You make it sound like they're completely butchering the game into something unrecognizable.Loop Stricken said:I would have liked this to remain, frankly. With how much they're removing, and the fact that they split it into three damn games, I might just not bother with it at all.erttheking said:Oh no...that was holding the game together. Really, is anyone seriously going to miss this?
Though if you want to skip out on it for it being three games, by all means, that's understandable.
"They" didn't take your games away. Nintendo took a minigame out. I don't see how removing one part of a game counts as taking your games away.Paragon Fury said:Snip
Would it be worth it? I mean how many people outside of the current internet flame wars even know that this thing exists and care about it in the slightest? And out of those how many would be interested in actually buying it? In physical format they might not even break even on the amount of copies they would need to make.Bat Vader said:Why not make two separate versions. One where the stuff is cut and one where the game is in its original unaltered state besides English. That way both camps can be happy.
It's kind of weak that your only major western example was trying to do something really minor in quiet fashion...Paragon Fury said:-snip-
I'd say it'd be worth it because it would help stop all the fighting. I also dislike stuff getting cut because it feels like I am paying more for less content. If due to localisation or anything else content gets cut from a game the price should reflect that.erttheking said:Would it be worth it? I mean how many people outside of the current internet flame wars even know that this thing exists and care about it in the slightest? And out of those how many would be interested in actually buying it? In physical format they might not even break even on the amount of copies they would need to make.Bat Vader said:Why not make two separate versions. One where the stuff is cut and one where the game is in its original unaltered state besides English. That way both camps can be happy.
The fighting is only really going on in internet forums, which I don't think Nintendo is willing to invest much money in preventing.Bat Vader said:I'd say it'd be worth it because it would help stop all the fighting. I also dislike stuff getting cut because it feels like I am paying more for less content. If due to localisation or anything else content gets cut from a game the price should reflect that.erttheking said:Would it be worth it? I mean how many people outside of the current internet flame wars even know that this thing exists and care about it in the slightest? And out of those how many would be interested in actually buying it? In physical format they might not even break even on the amount of copies they would need to make.Bat Vader said:Why not make two separate versions. One where the stuff is cut and one where the game is in its original unaltered state besides English. That way both camps can be happy.
And you conveniently leave out a problem: Shadow Dragon's sales were HALF of Blazing Sword's. And Shadow Dragon came out in NA in 2009, only six years after Blazing Sword. It's not as steep when Japanese sales are considered, but the dropoff was still bad (if VG Chartz is accurate, which I doubt, but I'll humor you) as losing a third to a half of your consumer base in never a good thing. And then Awakening came along and became the highest-selling entry in the franchise worldwide, in Europe, and in NA. In Japan it's the third highest-selling behind Mystery of the Emblem and Seisen no Keifu. And it far outsold its immediate predecessors in Japan. It saved the freaking franchise by reinvigorating it, adding flair to the series by doing a lot of things new which included visual design and putting an emphasis on the supports again like in Seisen no Keifu instead of having them be a side thing.MarsAtlas said:-Slash-
And the affinity system already got its own share of flak for being otaku pandering. I didn't mind it so much because at least it was based on the main game-mechanic. You improved the relationship between characters by pairing them up in fights and training their teamwork. It fit well in a series based on strategy and character. The petting mechanic is a feature that comes straight out of moe dating games. It is not "one step forward" it is a completely different mechanic that has nothing to do with the rest of the game. Taking it "one step forward" would be improving on that mechanic to maybe get more branching story paths depending on the relationship between the characters or more tragic consequences for losing a party-member.SquallTheBlade said:Huh, to me it feels like natural thing to expand on. Awakening already had pretty nice affinity system. Might as well go one step forward and include this.Silverspetz said:It is pointless because there is absolutely no reason to tie the relationship mechanic to such a minigame. It is woefully out of place here.SquallTheBlade said:How was it pointless? And what do you mean creepy? Have you considered that maybe the content wasn't aimed at you? There are people who would have liked it. Just because you don't like it doesn't mean it should be removed.Silverspetz said:People who think removing some pointless and creepy fanservice is a sign of big brother will never not be funny to me.
And WHY exactly are they fetishistic and creepy? Have you never patted someone on their head?It is creepy because playing around with characters faces just to see them blush is fetishistic and CREEPY.
Genuine question here. At what point exactly does that excuse stop working? At what point does something stop being "just bad writing" and become something that conveys an idea? Yes, this is bad writing. It is bad writing BECAUSE it portrays a scene where our here effectively turns a lesbian woman straight. Whether or not that was intentional is kind of besides that point. It is very possible for an artist to include something ideological that they didn't intend to because they didn't think their decisions through all the way. That is how art WORKS. There is ALWAYS some ideology involved, whether or not the artist intends for it or not.Piecewise said:Oh come on. Thats at worst just bad writing, not some sort of ideological message they're trying to shove in. There's no malice there; it's just stupid. And calling it "Gay conversion therapy" is like saying that The Last of Us is pro-patriarchal propaganda because it has a girl following a guy around and eventually being saved by him.
Also, what the heck does it have to do with the petting part? This sounds like completely unrelated stupidity.
WHAT??? They removed interception?erttheking said:I mean XCOM 2 is taking out the air battles that the last one has and no one is upset over that.
Yeah that's a bit BS. There is no social statement that inherently coming from a still life, or a realistic sculpture. Its still art, but any social statement is something nine times out of ten you're projecting on to it. If you want to project on to a story or art, ill intent that wasn't there to continue maintaining a persecution complex by all means continue but don't do so under the delusion that its somehow not something your actively trying to take offense at.Silverspetz said:Genuine question here. At what point exactly does that excuse stop working? At what point does something stop being "just bad writing" and become something that conveys an idea? Yes, this is bad writing. It is bad writing BECAUSE it portrays a scene where our here effectively turns a lesbian woman straight. Whether or not that was intentional is kind of besides that point. It is very possible for an artist to include something ideological that they didn't intend to because they didn't think their decisions through all the way. That is how art WORKS. There is ALWAYS some ideology involved, whether or not the artist intends for it or not.Piecewise said:Oh come on. Thats at worst just bad writing, not some sort of ideological message they're trying to shove in. There's no malice there; it's just stupid. And calling it "Gay conversion therapy" is like saying that The Last of Us is pro-patriarchal propaganda because it has a girl following a guy around and eventually being saved by him.
Also, what the heck does it have to do with the petting part? This sounds like completely unrelated stupidity.
Who the fuck said anything about a "social statement"? My whole point was that authors often include ideas they never intended to. That ideas doesn't have to be deliberate statements of how the author thinks the world should be. The intent behind it is UNIMPORTANT. What matters is what we actually see in the art itself.The Material Sheep said:Yeah that's a bit BS. There is no social statement that inherently coming from a still life, or a realistic sculpture. Its still art, but any social statement is something nine times out of ten you're projecting on to it. If you want to project on to a story or art, ill intent that wasn't there to continue maintaining a persecution complex by all means continue but don't do so under the delusion that its somehow not something your actively trying to take offense at.Silverspetz said:Genuine question here. At what point exactly does that excuse stop working? At what point does something stop being "just bad writing" and become something that conveys an idea? Yes, this is bad writing. It is bad writing BECAUSE it portrays a scene where our here effectively turns a lesbian woman straight. Whether or not that was intentional is kind of besides that point. It is very possible for an artist to include something ideological that they didn't intend to because they didn't think their decisions through all the way. That is how art WORKS. There is ALWAYS some ideology involved, whether or not the artist intends for it or not.Piecewise said:Oh come on. Thats at worst just bad writing, not some sort of ideological message they're trying to shove in. There's no malice there; it's just stupid. And calling it "Gay conversion therapy" is like saying that The Last of Us is pro-patriarchal propaganda because it has a girl following a guy around and eventually being saved by him.
Also, what the heck does it have to do with the petting part? This sounds like completely unrelated stupidity.